2,..,.,,.,,:,.:,.:,.:..;..',.:.-,.:..:..:..:..:..:»;..;.-:n:u:«wpi _ The hash includes rice, rye, potatoes, # *3 44. *4 # 4+ ## # # w# ##4 # + #* *# # ## *. .*, .“.“ «ow # # #* # # #4 ..... # m t tw .““ “.“: #4# ## ## a € Stricter ratiqning of foodstuffs, even to the army, will not tend to strengthâ€" en Germazmemorale. In an effort to overcome the Ailied blockade, which already, according to despatches from Switzerland, is being felt by Germany, the army is being fed a kind of a hash which comev wrapped in cellophane and looks.attractive enouzhâ€"but still is not beefsteakt. . THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23RD 1030 SIEFTING THE NEWS w# t o4. :t. :t 4 b.oq“.“.“.“.o.‘ " Just imagine ! 1 can enjoy my new Westinghouse Refrigerator all: winter and regular monthly payments don‘t start until next April ! " CLINIC 6 Pine St. N Jâ€" J IMVEMO@UGT, D. S. C. FOOT SPECIALISTâ€"CHIROPODIST 39 THIRD AVE. TIM MINS TELEPHONE 1870 Westinghouse Radios, Washers, Ranges and V acuum Cleaners ULT Save Every Day 69 COMMERCIAL AVENUE Phone 2640 FRESH FRUITS and :ï¬x Murphy Act Now While Present Stock Lasts PLAN YOUR MENU .*= WITH OUR LYNCH ELECTRICAL APPLIANCE CO. LINIC AT GRAMHMHAM‘s SHOE STORE St., N., Timmins, every day except Saturday Phone 11 for appointment or come in. Why put up with a foot condition that makes life mmiserable? Many of the most painful foot ailâ€" ments respond readily to proper treatment adminâ€" istered by a foot specialist. Don‘t suffer another dav! and Prompt Delivery starch, albumin and soya beans. The smoked sausage, thought so necessary to the German palate, now includes seventyâ€"five per cent powdered meat and a combination of dried fruits, toâ€" mato juice, liver extract, paprika and soya beans. A new drink has also been developâ€" ed from synthetic citric acid and ed â€" fron potatoes Scientifically these foods might take the place of thick, juicy beefsteak but it would seem that the Nazi army comâ€" mand would have rather a job on its nands convincing the German people, who have always been so fond things to cat, such as vegetables stuffed ruining your happiness ? QUALITY GRADE "A" MEA TS " It would be silly to put off buying on those terms. L told Jim there were only five left so we are going down to Lynchs‘ tomorrow and order ours while the old prices are still in effect " â€"â€"â€"SPECIAL OFFERâ€"â€"â€" on 5 New 1939 Westinghouse Refrigerators We have just this assortment left at the old prices. When they are gone the new price applies. In addition to saving on the purchase price we offer a payment plan where first regular monthly instalments start next Aupril. Instal a Westâ€" inghouse toâ€"day! This is a limited offer on the present stock. old ice box or a small down payment gives you immediats delivery with plug installed where required. with meat, blood sausage and the hunâ€" dreds of other bulky German foods, and good things to drink, such as good malt beer and coffee made with coffee beans. Perhaps the German people are too enervated by a constant diet of synâ€" thetic food that they have not ener;y enough to revolt. "It‘s a made collection of scribblers who make up the correspondents‘ corps at the front," according to one of them, William Henry, of the Los Angeles Times. From the usual "somewhere in France," Henry devotes a story to a description of some of their peculiariâ€" ties. One, he says, is a newsreel photoâ€" grapher who has been everywhere, was chased by Arabs in Palestine and saw his Jewish driver killed. "He‘s going to get killed some day,‘ Henry say, "because he has a weakness for waiting until somebody gets ready to pay a bill, reaching over and saying, ‘Let me look at that bit of paper money please‘ and tearing your five pound note in haif, and you have to chase him the rest of the day to get the other half back." "Then there are two.or three of those Fleet Street Rover Boys whose stories always start out ‘Well hére I am in Franceâ€"and what do you think?"â€"and so on. They get very angry when somebody picks up a copy of the paper with one of those yarns in it and starts to read it in a loud voice, with gestures, in a bar or a hotel lobby." In another story from Editor and. Publisher, from where the above was scalped, W. W. Chaplin, LN.S. corresâ€". pondent, says that newspapermen are well taken care of on the front. They live in hotels which "will never give any serious competition to the Ritz" but still are fair hotels. The Allied war office has provided a small car with a soldier driver, for every two correspondents. A conductâ€" ing officer takes them "almost everyâ€" where" they want to go. "Let us suppose it is the trenches as it has been several times," he says. "Well, we drive to a point fairly close to the front and then plod along on foot through the everâ€"deepening mud to the very edge of France, to the jumping Ooff place, to the errand and no doubt feasome things which are to come. . . " They see anything they want to and talk with whom they like, according to Chaplin. The war office, of course, cuts out anything that might be interâ€" esting or of comfort to the enemy . . . "but that‘s fair enough; this is, so we have read in the newspapers, a war.‘"‘ "Pa, what is a wizard?" "A person who can keep up with the neighbours and not get behind with the Mrs. Webster At Home Says Married Women With Employed Husbands Give up Positions women after they are married? Is it that they are more adaptable to their work? Is it that they are more exâ€" perienced?" Councillor McNeil thought the Counâ€" cillor had no license to deal with such a question, but, that it was a vitally iniportant question and he did not see how he could oppose the resolution. Said the Mayor: "Such a resolution, if sent to the government and to the Merchants‘ Association as you plan, will be buried and thrown into the waste paper basket. It should,. instead, go to the Municipal Association. Or, perhaps, it would be a good idea to send copies to all municipalities in the Proâ€" vince and have their agreement on the question. If it passed them it would gain weight and influence." Put to the question, the resolution carried Councillor Warren â€" voting against. Spence Sees Council Pete Spence, who completed a 1,500 mile trip by canoe from Timmins to the New York World‘s Pair, presented several letters of ‘greeting to the Council. A letter from the office of the Mayor of New York City and signed by Mayot LaGuardia, brought greetings to the Tcown of Timmins from New York. Mayor LaGuardia said the City of New York was pleased to receive Spence when he arrived after his hazardous trip. y Another letter was from the Mayor of Albany, another from the director of the Canadian Pavilion at the World‘s Fair and a fourth from the Mayor of Mattawa. Mayor Bartleman congratulated Spence on his safe return and assured him that the townspeople followed the stages of his trip with great interest. To Have Arbitrator A dispute of long standing between the firm which built the town hall, Hillâ€"Clarkâ€"Francis Limited, and the Town of Timmins, over the construcâ€" tion of the municipal building will be settled when the Town appoints an arâ€" bitrator to confer with D. R. Franklin who has been appointed arbitrator for the construction firm. The Mayor and Councillor Armstrong were authorized to select a suitable man to act as arbitrator for the town. French Navy to Assist in Blockade of Exports (Contnued from Page One) Guy LaChambre and Minister of Armâ€" aments Raoul Dautry conferred yesâ€" terday. iAs a result of the conference there was ordered the most thorough mobilization of French industry and agriculture that the nation has ever known. Plans also were mapped for French coâ€"operation with the British navy in the blockaze of German exâ€" ports. From Ott@wa comes a report that agreement will soon be reached on a Royal Air Force training scheme for which this country is to be the trainâ€" ing ground. Prime Minister Mackenâ€" zie King said that Great Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand were ready to put the plan into operaâ€" tion as soon as financial arrangements are approved. ' The 2495 ton British steamer "Gerâ€" aldus" was sunk off the Irish coast on Tuesday. ‘The crew of 26 was saved. The 1.335 ton British destroyer "Gypsy" went down in shallow water after striking a mine off the east coast of England yesterday. Forty men are believed lost and 24 officers and men are injured, A French trawler was sunk off the southeast coast of England. Nine of a crew of 10 were saved. King George prorogued parliament in London today. In his Speech from the Throne, King George said that the inâ€" vasion of (Poland, after Britain‘s efâ€" forts to prevent a war, was "a chalâ€" lenize that we could not have declined mwithout dishonour to ourselves." many "wantonly" invaded Poland, he said. The Greek freighter, "Alena R.", a 4,576 ton vessel bound from Argentine to Antwerp with a carzo of wheat, was sunk Ooff the south coast of England when it hit a floating mine. The twenâ€" tyâ€"four persons aboard were saved by a coastal boat. Marriage of Timmins young Man at Richmond Hill Richmond Hill, Ont., Nov. 22.â€"On Sunday, November 12 at Richmond Hill, Margaret Lucelil Stewart, daughter of George Charles and Mrs. Stewart, of Richmond Hill, became the bride of Albert Henry Smith, son of Albert Thomas and Mrs. Smith, of Timmins, Ontario. The happy couple were atâ€" tended by Floyd S. Forsyth and Reta A full dress debate on all aspects of the war will follow in the near future. *‘ Globe aid Mail: Neutral Switzerland has captured and interned a war prisâ€" onerâ€"a Naz found asleep on his rifle in a train from Germany. As there was no trouble about the capture, the E. Wells, both of Stouffville, Ont. The marriage was solemnized by the Rev. W. F. Wrixon. Mr. and Mrs. Smith will make their home in Timmins, Ont. only point is that this bright soldier is safe "for the duration." Globe and Mail: A fire in a little, almostâ€"unhearedâ€"of Venezuelan town cost more lives than have been lost in a month of the war. (Continued from Page One>) Mavyor Says Governâ€" ment Interested in Airport Plan (Continmued from Page One) worse here than it is anywhere else in a town of this size." The Mayor: "How then do you acâ€" count for the fact that expenditure for treatment was $1,500 in 1935 and in 1939 it will be ‘"‘Timmins ranked second in Ontarin in prevalence Of the disease," said Councillor Armstrong. "It is someâ€" thing that should not be kept hidden but should be brouzht out in to the light." Recruits From Timmins Earlier in the year fiftyâ€"one recruits for the Royal Canadian Engineers went from Timmins. The recruiting officer was not in a position to pay the men‘s fares to Toronto and so the town had to guarantee them. The Town asked the Department of Nationâ€" al Defence to refund the money and correspondence has ‘been exchanged since that time. The Mayor showed a letter from the Department of National Defence which guaranteed that the money, approxiâ€" mately $740, would be refunded to the Town. The Mayor did not, however, read the date on the letter. It was dated before the Mayor and Councillor Armstrong left on their trip. The impression left by the Mayor was that his and Councillor Armâ€" strong‘s conversation with Department of National Defence official ‘was reâ€" sponsible for the refunding of the money. "They were very courteous to us and considerate of what we said," said the Mayor® ' "Yes," said Councillor Warren, "they were very diplomatic and didn‘t refuse you a thing." Better Radio Reception Another visit the deputation made was to the Canadian Broadcastin‘ Corporation about reception and exâ€" cessive commercialization of radio time by the Timmins station. "The Commission promised. that something would be done. They were very considerate of us. Also, they proâ€" mised that something would be done about having an Inspector in this area. I pointed out that the nearest one was in Haileybury and that the centre of TUESDAY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28 .29 BACHELOR CIGARS 15 â€"â€"~â€"LOGCAL STARS IN CASTâ€"~175 "WE‘RE PIRATES BOLD" A GUARANTEED SHOW FOR A GOOD CAUSKE PROCEEDS FOR THE RED CROSS Matineesâ€"Tuesday Wednesday Students 25¢ _ Adults 50; Eveningsâ€"50¢ Reserved Seats 50¢ Extra TICKETS ON SALE AT Don‘t Be Disappointedâ€"Get Your Tickets NOW ! New Songs â€" New Costumes â€" New Scenery Goldfields T heatre "PIRATE GOLD‘ _ (New Hit Tune of "PIRATE GOLD") The High and Vocational School Presents IF YOU LIKE GOOD MUSIC AND A FAST SHOW DON‘T MISS THID BIG TREAT 100% Havana Filler A Mallabarâ€"Turner Production MOISLEY BALL DRUG TIMMINS population in ‘Timmins." Rock Obstruction Through his efforts, said the Mayor, the government would send a man up to inspect the rock obstruction in the Mattagami River above Sandy Fallsâ€" the same obstruction which each year caused floods along the banks of the river in this area. The inspector would report on the obstruction with a view to having it removed this winter, said Mayor Bartleman. Another achievement he described, was a long talk with the Deputy Minâ€" ister of Labour and with the Chief Factory Inspector. They promised to have more regular inspection of plants in Timmins. R.A.F. Mobile Unit If the government concurs with the resolution of the Council it will send a Royal Air Force Mobile Recruiting Unit to Timmins. A motion was passâ€" Monday, November 27th The winner of Friday‘s Game plays Coniaurum in this Final Game of the Series. Friday, November 24th SCHUMACHER LIONS CLUB Preâ€"Season Cup Series McINTYRE vs. DOME this district was around HQC K E Y GAME CALLED FOR 8.30 p.m ed to that effect iast night. It would, said the Mayor, be a good idea inasmuch as many of the youthful unemployed of Timmins, who are pert mechaniecs or who have training along mechanical lines, could be abâ€" sorbed by the RAF. It needed not only airmen and observers but techniâ€" cians of all kinds even to motor boat operators. Dance in Aid of the Red Cross on Friday, Dec. 1st The staff of the Bucovetsky Stores will act as hosts and hostesses at aA dance to be held in the McIntyre Comâ€" munity hall on Friday, December 1st, the proceeds to be donated to the Red Cross, The event will be semiâ€"formal, and music will be provided by "Rick" Roâ€" berts and the Buffaloâ€"Ankerite Orchesâ€" tr.